#200 China Railway Construction

#200 China Railway Construction

Market Cap$22.8B

IndustryConstruction Services

Founded1948

CountryChina

ChairmanShao Huang

Employees295,862

Sales$109.1B

HeadquartersBeijing

As of May 15, 2019

China Railway Construction Corp. Ltd. engages in the construction business. It operates through five segments: Construction, Survey, Design & Consultancy, Manufacturing, Real Estate and Other Business Operations. The Construction Operations segment engages in the construction of infrastructure such as railways, highways, metropolitan railways and real estate projects. The Survey, Design & Consultancy Operations segment engages in the provision of survey, design and consultancy services, as well as technology and equipment

research and development service. The Manufacturing Operations segment engages in the design, research and development, production and sale of large track maintenance machinery as well as the manufacturing of components for railway construction. The Real Estate Operations segment engages in the development, construction and sale of real estate projects. The Other Business Operations segment mainly comprises real estate development and logistics businesses. The company was founded on November 4, 2007 and is headquartered in Beijing, China.

As one of the greatest nations on the planet, the United States excels in a number of areas, innovation and entrepreneurship foremost among them. But something you might be hard-pressed to find at the top of anyone’s best-of list is infrastructure—specifically roads, rail and mass transit. In this department at least, [...]

Pharmacies are a major source of healthcare in many low- and middle-income countries. They could take tests closer to people, and help address the last mile problem of getting essential diagnostic tests to those who need them the most.

Huawei stands accused of "dubious ethics," with a train of alleged examples of IP theft and links to Beijing's intelligence agencies. All denied. What Huawei has not denied is links to the surveillance state in Xinjiang. If you want to see "dubious ethics" at work, start there.

At the end of a nightmare week for Huawei, with its smartphone supply chain seeming to evaporate in the wake of U.S. sanctions coming into effect, Beijing has now hit back with its own proposed cybersecurity laws which could be used to restrict U.S. tech from being sold in China's vast marketplace.

Airports serve large numbers of diverse customers. See how they are finding innovative ways to treat these customers as individuals, to help everyone feel like they belong, and two ways you can get started doing the same.